Nikko Vent

Latitude: 23.08ºN    Longitude: 142.325ºE    Depth: 460 m bsl

Vent sites*: Naraku, Varnum (InterRidge Vents Database Ver. 3.3)

Nikko seamount hosts one of the world’s largest hydrothermal systems (Pala, 2009). The volcano is unusual because it is part of the active Mariana arc (N. Seamount Province) but is also where the Mariana Trough backarc basin extension axis intersects the arc in the north. Nikko has the morphology of a resurgent caldera (Resing et. al., 2009). The summit of Nikko has pools of molten sulfur (Embley et al., 2007; Nakamura et al., 2009). The associated hydrothermal plume is characterized by elevated concentrations of total dissolved Fe and Mn which indicates that these plumes issue from high T vents (Resing et. al, 2009).  Plumes are also rich in CO23He and H2S (Resing et.al, 2009). The biological of community is dominated by decapod crustaceans such as Austinograea yunohana (Takeda et al., 2000) and some microbes such as Epsilonproteobacteria (Huber et al., 2010).

Table 1: Operations history for Nikko Vent

Ship/ PlatformOperationYearDive NumberReferences
MGLN02MV R/V Melville/ ROV Jason-2CTD tow-yo; CTD vertical cast; SeaBeam 2000 multibeam2006April– MayJ2-198 – J2-199Submarine Ring of Fire, 2006Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution: ROV JASON/MEDEA: Operations Summary (note: click “Files- operations summary”)
NT10-13 Natsushima Leg.2/ Hyper-dolphinNot found2010July – AugustHPD#1163 HPD#1164 HPD#1168 HPD#1169 HPD#1165NT10-13 leg2 cruise report
TN-153 R/V T.G. ThompsonEM 300 multibeam; CTD tow-yo2003 February – MarchNot foundSubmarine Ring of Fire, 2003

Table 2: Vent activity and host rocks

Activity and host rocksReferences
ActivityActive volcano,last erupted 1974Smithsonian Global Volcanism Program
Host RocksBasalt and DaciteBloomer et al., 1989

Table 3: Plume Characteristics

ParameterReferences
Temperature (ºC)High T 61-112; >200Resing et al., 2009; Lupton et al.,2008; Embley et al., 2007
pH5.05-6.21Huber et al., 2010
ΔpH-0.160Resing et al., 2009
CompositionRich in CO2, ³He, H2S, S, Sulfates and total dissolved Fe and MnLupton et al., 2008
CO2 (mM)3.53-96.5Resing et al., 2009
ΔCO2 (mM)43Lupton et al., 2008
H2 (mM)0.0006-0.0396Resing et al., 2009
Particulate Fe (nmol/kg)502Huber et al., 2010

* ΔpH, ΔCO– Measured relative to the regional background.

Table 4: Vent Biology

General namePhylumOrderFamilySpeciesReferences
BacteriaProteobacteriaEpsilonproteobacteriaThiofractor thiocaminusHuber et al., 2010Makita et al., 2012
CrabArthropodaDecapodaBythograeidaeAustinograea yunohana (Gandalfus yunohana)*Takeda et al., 2000Yorisue et al., 2012
BarnaclesArthropodaSessiliaNeoverrucidaeNeoverrcuca sp.Yorisue et al., 2012
CrabArthropodaDecapodaXanthidaeYorisue et al., 2012
CrabArthropodaDecapodaParapaguridaeParagiopagurus ventilatusKomai et al., 2010
ShrimpArthropodaDecapodaAlvinocaridaeAlvinocaris sp.Yorisue et al., 2012
ShrimpArthropodaDecapodaAlvinocarididaeOpaepele sp.Tsuchida et al. 2002Miyake et al., 2007
Tube WormsAnnelidaPolychaetaSiboglinidaeLamellibrachia satsuma  (trophosome)Black et al, 1997Kojima et al., 2012Hashimoto et al. 1993 
Tube WormsAnnelidaPolychaetaSiboglinidaeLamellibrachia satsuma (muscle)Black et al, 1997Kojima et al. 2012 Yorisue et al., 2012
Scale WormsAnnelidaPolycheataPolynoidaeBranchinotoglumaburkensisBranchinotoglumamarianus*Pettibone, 1989Kojima et al., 2015
MusselsMolluscaBivalviaMytilidaeGigantidas sp.Kyuno et al., 2009
SnailsMolluscaGastropodaPhenacolepadidaeShinkailepas sp.Yorisue et al., 2012
TurridsMolluscaGastropodaTurridaeOenopota ogasawaranaYorisue et al., 2012
TonguefishOsteichthyesActinopterygiiCynoglossidaeSymphurus thermophylusTunnicliffe et al., 2010Munroe et al., 2008

Images:

  1. Small chimneys on the floor of Nikko caldera. The venting is so prolific that the smoke often impedes visibility on the sea floor.
  2. There is so much sulfur being produced at Nikko that volcanic rocks are only rarely exposed. The sea floor in the summit crater is mostly covered by lush bushes of tubeworms in association with white crabs, flatfish, and shrimps. 
  3. One fish seems to thrive around the hydrothermal vents of the Mariana volcanoes. At Daikoku and Nikko volcanoes tonguefish and crabs cover the sea floor in some areas. 
  4. These are four tonguefish samples from Nikko volcano. The fish at Nikko are almost twice as big as their counterparts on Daikoku. The largest sample here is less than 11 cm (5 in) long.

Videos:

  1. The Nikko volcano has numerous hydrothermal vents, an extraordinary biomass, and marine life.
  2. The crater floor at Nikko has many sulfur chimneys, both active and inactive.
  3. The south rim of the summit crater at Nikko is covered by an amazing density of tubeworms.
  4. The south slope of the summit cone at Nikko was found to contain a large area with boiling pots of molten sulfur.
  5. Closer examination of the area around the molten sulfur pots reveals that what appears to be solid ground is just a thin crust on a larger lake of molten sulfur!
  6. When the Jason IIremotely operated vehicle tries to sample a rock, it sinks through the thin crust on a lake of molten sulfur!

References:

  1. Black, M. B., Halanych, K. M., Mass, P. A. Y., Hoeh, W.R., Hashimoto, J., Desbruyères, D., Lutz, R. A., Vrijenhoek, R. C., 1997. Molecular systematic of vestimetiferan tubeworms from hydrothermal vents and cold-water seeps. Marine Biology 130, 141–149.
  2. Bloomer, S. H., Stern, R. J., Fisk, E., Geschwind, C. H., 1989. Shoshonitic Volcanism in the Northern Mariana Arc. 1. Mineralogic and Major and Trace Element Characteristics. Journal of Geophysical Research 94 (B4), 4469-4496.
  3. Embley, R. W., Baker, E. T., Butterfield, D. A., Chadwick, W. W. Jr., Lupton, J. E., Resing, J. A., de Ronde, C. E. J., Nakamura, K., Tunnicliffe, V., Dower, J. F., Merle, S. G., 2007. Exploring the submarine ring of fire: Mariana Arc- Western Pacific, Oceanography 20, 68–79.
  4. Hashimoto J., Miura T., Fujikura K., Ossaka J., 1993. Discovery of vestimentiferan tube-worms in the euphotic zone. Zoological Science, 10, 1063–1067.
  5. Huber, J. A., Cantin, H. V., Huse, S. M., Welch, D. B., Sogin, M. L., Butterfield, D. A., 2010. Isolated communities of Epsilonproteobacteria in hydrothermal vent fluids of the Mariana Arc seamounts: FEMS Microbiol Ecol. 73 (3), 538-549.
  6. Kojima, S., Watanabe, H., 2015. Vent Fauna in the Mariana Trough. In: Ishibashi, J., Okino, K., Sunamura, M. (Eds.), Subseafloor Biosphere Linked to Hydrothermal Systems: TAIGA Concept. Springer Japan, 313-323.
  7. Kojima S, Murakami S, Nemoto S, Watanabe H, Miyake H, Tsuchida S., 2012. Genetic diversity and population structure of a vestimentiferan annelid Lamellibrachia satsuma in Japanese and northern Mariana waters. Plankton Benthos Res 7, 146–150.
  8. Komai, O., Kitajima, M., Nemoto, S., Miyake, H., 2010. New record of Paragiopagurus ventilates (Crustacea: Decapoda: Anomura: Parapaguridae) from hydrothermal vents on the Nikko Seamount, Mariana Trough, the first hermit crab using siboglinid tubes for housing. Marine Biodiversity Records 3, 1- 8.
  9. Kyuno, A., Shintaku, M., Fujita, Y., Matsumoto, H., Utsumi, M., Watanabe, H., Fujiwara, Y., Miyazaki, J., 2009. Dispersal and Differentiation of Deep-Sea Mussels of the Genus Bathymodiolus (Mytilidae, Bathymodiolinae). Journal of Marine Biology 2009, 1-15.
  10. Lupton, J., Lilley, M., Butterfield, D., Evans, L., Embley, R., Massoth, G., Christenson, B., Nakamura, K., Schmidt, M., 2008. Venting of a separate CO2-rich gas phase from submarine arc volcanoes: Examples from the Mariana and Tonga-Kermadec arcs. Journal of Geophysical Research 113 (B8), 1-21.
  11. Makita, H., Nakagawa, S., Miyazaki, M., Nakamura, K., Inagaki, F., Takai, K., 2012. Thiofractor thiocaminus gen. nov., sp. nov., a novel hydrogen-oxidizing, sulfur-reducing epsilonproteobacterium isolated from a deep-sea hydrothermal vent chimney in the Nikko Seamount Weld of the northern Mariana Arc. Arch Microbiol 194, 785–794.
  12. Miyake, H., Kitada, M., Tsuchida, S., Okuyama, Y., Nakamura, K., 2007. Ecological aspects of hydrothermal vent animals in captivity at atmospheric pressure. Marine Ecology. 28 (1), 1–241.
  13. Munroe, T. A., Hashimoto, J., 2008. New Western Pacific Tonguefish (Pleuronectiformes: Cynoglossidae): The first Pleuronectiform discovered at active Hydrothermal Vents. Zootaxa 1839, 43–59.
  14. Pala, C., 2009. The Pacific Ocean’s Acidification. Environmental Science and Technology 43, 6451–6452.
  15. Pettibone, M. H., 1989. New species of scale-worms (Polychaeta: Polynoidae) from the hydrothermal rift-area of the Mariana Back-Arc Basin in the western central Pacific. Proc Biol Soc Wash 102, 137–153.
  16. Resing, J. A., Baker, E. T., Lupton, J. E., Walker, S. L., Butterfield, D. A., Massoth, G. J., Nakamura, K., 2009. Chemistry of hydrothermal plumes above submarine volcanoes of the Mariana Arc. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems 10 (2), 1-23.
  17. Takeda, M., Hashimoto, J., Ohta, S., 2000. A new species of the family Bythograeidae (Crustacea, Decapoda, Brachyura) from the hydrothermal vents along volcanic front of the Philippine Sea Plate. Bulletin of the National Science Museum,Tokyo, series A, Zoology 26 (4), 159–172.
  18. Tunnicliffe, V., Koop, B. F., Tyler, J., So, S., 2010. Flatfish at seamount hydrothermal vents show strong genetic divergence between volcanic arcs. Marine Ecology 31, 158–167.
  19. Yorisue, T., Inoue, K., Miyake, H., Kojima, S., 2012. Trophic structure of hydrothermal vent communities at Myojin Knoll and Nikko Seamount in the northwestern Pacific: Implications for photosynthesis-derived food supply. Plankton Benthos Res 7(2), 35–40.

Website References:

  1. InterRidge Vents Database Ver. 3.3; http://vents-data.interridge.org/ventfield/nikko-volcano (accessed 11/24/2015)
  2. Smithsonian Global Volcanism Program http://volcano.si.edu/volcano.cfm?vn=284132 (accessed 11/24/2015)
  3. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution: ROV JASON/MEDEA: Operations Summary; http://www.whoi.edu/main/jason/operations-summary (accessed 11/24/2015)
  4. Submarine Ring of Fire 2006 http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/explorations/06fire/logs/may12/may12.html (accessed 11/24/2015)

Cruise Reports:

  1. NT10-13 leg2 cruise report http://www.godac.jamstec.go.jp/catalog/data/doc_catalog/media/NT10-13_leg2_all.pdf (accessed 11/24/2015)
  2. Submarine Ring of Fire 2006 http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/explorations/06fire/logs/summary/media/srof06_cruisereport_final.pdf (accessed 11/24/2015)
  3. Submarine Ring of Fire 2003 http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/explorations/03fire/logs/summary/marianas_cruisereport.pdf (accessed 11/24/2015)